Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 296, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 March 1927 — Page 19

MA±t<JJdL 18,1927

WOMEN NEED MEN’S NONCHALANCE IN AFFAIRS OF HEART

Modern Girl Should Adopt Unemotional Attitude, Says Miss Lee. SHE WOULD BE HAPPIER As It Is Love Still Is All Absorbing For Her. By Martlia Lee A lot of men complain these days because, as they declare, women are changing. “They are trying to ape the men,” is often said of the members of the fair sex. Far be it from me to defend masculinity in my sister woman, especially when it is manifested in extreme “manly” styles of dress, but it would surely be a blessing if women could acquire the more unemotional, matter of fact, attitude that the average man assumes in matters of the heart. It’s a trite conclusion, but. still true, that a woman’s love for a man usually takes in all the interests of her life, while the love of the man for the woman of his heart, is badly deflected by a multiplicity of business and other interests. That’s why a woman, after a disappointing love affair, finds it difficult to pick up the threads of her life, while the man usually patches up the broken in his heart with comparative ease. Perhaps as woman’s interest continues to broaden, she, too, will acquire this admirable nonchalance of the men in this'regard. There are few feminine mental accomplishments which would be more valuable to her. He Jilted Her Dear Martha Lee: Could you help me? I am broken hearted. I met a man six months ago and I loved him almost at eight. Once he told me that I was the only girl he ever loved truly and deeply. About a month ago, I noticed that he did not seem to want to call and I suspected that there was another girl. Now I know it. because, O Miss Lee. word has come to me that he has married a girl that he met only recently. What I can’t understand is that he told me again and again that he loved me. Do you think that he did?—or lied to me? BROKEN HEARTED GIRL. He probably meant what he said at the time, but there are degrees of love and he has proved that you were not what this girl seems to him. I am sure you will take the sensible view oft this. There is noth-

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ing you can do, but work hard to forget him. Fill your time with all the interests ybu can devise. Wants Company, Too Dear Martha Lee: I am 23 yearg old and my husband (# S4. Wo were married eight months and have been eeparated almost two years now. As he evidently thinks I will go back with him in time, he will not let me get a divorce. Just before Christmas, I met a lovely young man. but my mother objects to him coming to the house ae I am not divorced yet. I have been meeting him down town, but I do. not like to do that. My husband is courting a girl who lives near my home. Now don t you think I have a right to have 8^ w c § m ||^ V g/° 0? It would seem that you and your husband could come to some agreement about your future. If you are positive that you will not return to him, insist that either he or you apply for a divorce. Your present arrangement is ridiculous. . Disapproves of Friends Dear Martha Lee: I am a young girl and although I have a nice father, he will not let me have any friends at home. He says. “This house is no meeting house. Now I am going with a very nice boy. but the way father is acting, I’m afraid it will spoil our friendship. Now I have been meeting him out lately, but r don’t like to do that either. What do you think? I am 17. SAD HEARTED. I earnestly advise you not to meet this young man on the streets, dear girl. If you will frankly explain to him how your father feels about company for you, he will not blame you and it need not spoil your friendship. You have much time yet. Aren’t you pretty busy with your school work? It would be wise to be at this time. He’s Not Had Dates Dear Martha Lee: I am a boy who would like your advice, if you please. I will soon he twenty and I have never run around with girls, partly because I have not had enough courage to make dates with them. I guess too. Ihavenot got d ; aP d o cr t pn t^'f I ? , ar^tt l e i r ke off A n n s dates ’ mOBt WONDE m RING ke “ and In defense of the girls, Mr. Wondering. You are mistaken that “most of them smoke and drink.” Some do, of course, but I am positive that they are so much in the minority that your conclusion is away out of focus. No, I don’t think you are better off to have no girl friends: I think you should have. It should help the disposition you speak of. FRUIT SALAD When planning a fruit salad from cans, always place the cans against the ice early in the day, so their contents will be cold when dinner time comes.

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FAT MAN FOR HUSBAND? NO, SAID MRS. COOLIDGE That’s the Real Reason Sausages Were Banned for President —They Made Him Heavier.

By Allene Sumner CHAPTER X WASHINGTON, March 18.—The waistline plays a big part in Washington official life. And no joke’s intended. It begins almost the first day the new Congressman’s wife get to

Washington. If she’s a perfect 34 or 36 and if she happens to run into a crowd of other official ladies who know the joke because they’ve been in Washington for some time, they say “Here’s one for the lucky set.” And the new lady learns that "The Lucky Set” is an esoteric crowd of official women with less-than-a-yard waistlines. An Expensive Waistline “Only $lO a week for you! You Lucky Thing!” she is told. In a day or so she begins to learn what they mean. Her mail begins to come in. As she pinches a half dozen unopened letters she feels something soft. She opens them. Out comes a little apron or a silk handkerchief or a blouse with a pocket in the corner. A letter reads—- “ Dear Mrs. So-and-So. Our church is holding a bazar to raise funds for anew carpet. We want to auction off an autographed apron by you. Will you please embroider your name on this and put as many

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dimes in*the pocket as you are inches around the waist?” One Senator’s wife told me that the pocket and waistline craze has so swept the land that she has received as many as fifty from her State’s churches in one week, and has reckoned that her waistline would cost her nearly S2OO that week. And that isn’t half of it. They write: “Please send us half a dozen autographed pictures of Mrs. Coolidge by air mail. We would like one to read, ‘To My Dear Little Dolly,’ another one, ‘With Love to Susie’; a third one, ‘With All My Heart to Tom.’ They are prizes for the primary children who have learned the most Bible verses last month.” Or they may nonchalantly wire a request for an autographed book “by Washington’s best-known writer,” or an old discarded pipe that the President once smoked (it doesn’t matter whether a smoking President happens to reside in the White House or not), or “just any old coat or hat or piece of lingerie of Mrs. Coolidge—we want it to raffle off at our Parent-Teacher bazaar.” No Place to Reduce . But we were talking about the part waistlines play in official Washington. The big part* they play. One part is as a topic of conver-

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sation. They say in Washington that you can “spot” "a first tenner” a mile away—- “ Because by the time they have been in Washington a while they are in the buxom sisterhood class." Teas and breakfasts and luncheons and dinners, with each hostess vying with the last to set a richer table, do wonders to the erstwhile perfect figure. Ham for Sausage “What do we talk about?” laughed an official lady to me. “Reducing, of course. From Mrs. Coolidge down. We tell our pet methods. She thinks that she was just born plain lucky, for she doesn’t seem to get fat whatever she eats. But she says that the President must be careful—she just won’t have a fat husband even If he Is President of the United States. “She laughed and laughed at a Senate ladies’ luncheon about him swapping his sausage for ham because he had gained about ten pounds since the winter buckwheat, sirup and sausage breakfasts began! “ ‘lsn’t it just like a man to make a sacrifice by giving up something he likes for something which he likes even more?’ she chuckled.” Her Permanent Waves There is little connection between waistlines and permanent waves, unless both have to do with personal appearance, but the permanent wavers may or may not be interesting to learn that Mrs. Coolidge has had two and is not sure, say they, that she will have another. She has the “frizzy” rather than the waved kind, just as before her permanents, she preferred a round curl to a marcel. Her hair is the kind that women boast is so long they “can sit on it.” Probably. Mrs. Woodbridge Ferris, wife of the Senator from Michigan, who is known as “one of the seven Sutherland sisters” because of her ropes of hair, is the only official woman with more hair than the First Lady. EGG BEATER Never let the cog part of the egg •beater get into water, but wash the lower part, dry It and set in a warm place until all dampness has disappeared. Water draws oil from the geajig. GARDEN FERTILIZER Kitchen garbage makes excellent fertilizer for the garden, riant it in a deep hole, throw a little earth over it and plant another layer. Cover with earth, adding a little lime if the soil needs it.

M /Ao FAMHJY By Sister Mary BREAKFAST —Apple ,sauce, cereal, cream, crisp graham toast, broiled bacon, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Cream of spinach soup, hot cheese sandwiches, celery and cabbage salad, canned strawberries, drop cookies, milk, tea. DINNER —Boiled dinner of corned beef and winter vegetables, lettuce and tomato salad, maple nut charlotte/ rye bread, milk, coffee. Do you ever visualize your menus as you read them over? It adds much interest’ to the serving of them, for in this day of colored linen runners and cloths you can make the family luncheon or breakfast table a veritable picture. You, yourself, may be

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She Got Rid of Those Two Bad Mornings Menstruation is a perfectly natural process, but the painful part is NEF,DLESS. Long study has absolutely conquered menstrual pain. Science now offers women reliable and complete relief —In a simple, utterly harmless tablet called midol. This newest achievement of the laboratory has nothing to do with drastic, habit-forming drugs that kill pain by henumbling the whole system! Midol acts directly on the organs affected by menstruation, and nowhere else. Yet relief and abso* lute comfort come in five to seven minutes! So, why have a twinge of pain—feel “low” or even uncomfortable? | Or take anything to depress the heart or upset the system? All drug stores have midol in a thin alum-1 inum box that tucks In purse or i pocket—for BO cents. —Advertise- j ment. KidoV Takes Pain Off tH% Calendar

the only one at the table who really appreciates the color effect, but every member of the family will blindly perhaps, enjoy his meal more than usual and your secret satisfaction will be great. The luncheon menu is colorful and offers opportunity for experiment. Maple Nut Charlotte One-half cup scalded milk, 1-3 cup maple syrup, 1 tablespoon granulated gelatine, 4 tablespoons cold water, 1-4 teaspoon vanilla, few grains salt, 1-2 cup finely chopped unts, 1 cup whipping cream, sponge cake or lady fingers. Heat milk In top of double boiler and slowly add maple syrup. Let gelatine stand in cold water for ten minutes and add to hot milk. Stir over hot water until gelatine is thoroughly dissolved. Remove at once

PLAYER ROLLS QRS—US—Vocalstyle Crazy Words, Crazy Tunes —Fox Trot. I Never See Maggie Alone—Fox Trot. That’s What I Call a Pal—Waltz. You’re the One For Me—Fox Trot. High, High, High, Up in the Hills —Fox Trot. Hello Swanee, Hello—Fox Trot. Blue Skies—Fox Trot.

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from heat and place pan in ice water. When mixture begins to thicken add nuts, vanilla and salt and fold in cream whipped until firm. Line a mold with split lady fingers or thin slices of sponge oake. Pour In gelatine mixture. Chill before serving. For a r festive occasion, garnish with whipped cream and halves of nuts to serve. But the pudding is delicious served plain.

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